As golden age rap suddenly gave way to West Coast gangsta in the early '90s, an East Coast variety of hardcore rap arose in turn, with
Mobb Deep initially standing tall as one of New York's hardcore figureheads on the basis of their epochal album
The Infamous. Released in April 1995,
The Infamous was released almost exactly a year after
Illmatic and about a half year after
Ready to Die -- the debut masterpieces of
Nas and
the Notorious B.I.G., respectively, both albums likewise of momentous significance for East Coast hardcore rap. On
The Infamous,
Mobb Deep (comprised of
Prodigy and
Havoc) set the tone for future generations of hardcore New York rappers, from
G-Unit to
Dipset. Subsequent releases from the duo were likewise influential, especially
Hell on Earth (1996). However, by the late '90s,
Mobb Deep was no longer setting trends; in fact, they seemed to be following them, and they lost some of their stature as subsequent generations of hardcore rappers arose. For a few years,
Mobb Deep struggled to reclaim their commercial standing, until they eventually drifted into the
G-Unit camp, where they signed a lucrative deal to join
50 Cent and company.
Blood Money (2006),
Mobb Deep's first release under the
G-Unit banner, rekindled interest in the veteran duo, who enjoyed a substantial uptick in sales and airplay.
Prodigy (
Albert Johnson, born November 2, 1974) and
Havoc (
Kejuan Muchita, born May 21, 1974) grew up in Queens, specifically the Queensbridge area, yet met in Manhattan, where both were students at Graphic Arts High School. Their shared love of hip-hop resulted in a natural companionship, and while they were still teens, the two young men had themselves a record deal with 4th & Broadway, a major rap label affiliated with Island Records. In 1993, the label released
Juvenile Hell, a confrontational album featuring noteworthy production work by
DJ Premier and
Large Professor, who both within a year's time would move on to produce the debut of another young Queensbridge rapper,
Nas. Not much came of
Juvenile Hell, however, and it would be two more years before
Mobb Deep would return.
When they did return in 1995, it was on a different label, Loud Records, and with a significantly developed approach.
The Infamous featured a mammoth street anthem, "Shook Ones, Pt. 2," but it was a solid album all around, featuring also the in-house production work of
Havoc and a couple high-profile features (
Nas,
Raekwon).
The Infamous was more hardcore than its two key stylistic predecessors,
Illmatic and
Ready to Die; the beats were darker and harder-hitting while the rhymes were downright threatening yet still inventive and crafty. Moreover, there were no crossover hits like "Big Poppa" or "Juicy." In fact, there were no light moments at all.
The Infamous was an uncompromising album for the streets, and it was championed as such.
A year later, in 1996,
Mobb Deep returned with a follow-up,
Hell on Earth, which was a little slicker than
The Infamous yet still emphasized hardcore motifs. It spawned a couple hit singles that were given appropriately theatrical videos. At this point, hardcore rap was at its peak, with Death Row Records flourishing on the West Coast and a legion of New Yorkers jumping into the scene, following the lead of
Nas,
the Notorious B.I.G., and
Mobb Deep. So when it took over two years for
Mobb Deep to return with a new album,
Murda Muzik, not released until April 1999, the rap landscape had changed significantly.
Mobb Deep now had significant competition, and since
Murda Muzik offered few innovations and lacked the spark of the duo's past two albums, it was met with some disappointment. By and large, fans enjoyed it, yet the album didn't appeal beyond the already established fan base, as the album only offered one major hit, "Quiet Storm." The following year,
Prodigy released a solo album,
H.N.I.C. (2000). It got a lukewarm reception, appealing to the duo's fan base yet spawning no hits.
When
Mobb Deep resurfaced, in December 2001 with
Infamy, they showcased a new willingness to reach beyond their fan base. "Hey Luv" was issued as a single, and it was the first
Mobb Deep song to flirt with R&B crossover, or even to mention love, for that matter. The song got some airplay, thanks in part to its hook, which is sung by the R&B act
112, and its video, which played up the song's air of seduction. Nonetheless,
Infamy proved to be a relative disappointment commercially, and it seemed like
Mobb Deep was beginning to see their popularity erode with each passing year. It didn't help, either, that around this time the duo -- and
Prodigy, in particular -- had been attacked by
Jay-Z on "Takeover." And too, that Loud Records would go out of business, leaving
Mobb Deep without a label deal. For the next few years, from roughly 2002-2005,
Prodigy and
Havoc tried to regain their footing. There were one-off albums released via various label arrangements --
Free Agents: The Murda Mix Tape (Landspeed, 2003),
Amerikaz Nightmare (Jive, 2004), and
The Mix Tape Before 9/11 (X-Ray, 2004) -- that made minimal impact. By this point, not even the fan base was all that interested; it had been eroded with each passing year, leaving few faithful.
Then came a surprise announcement that
50 Cent had signed
Mobb Deep to his
G-Unit family and that an album would be forthcoming. First came a quick remix featuring the latest
G-Unit signing, "Outta Control," which supplanted the original version when
50's
The Massacre was reissued in 2005 as a CD/DVD. Too,
Mobb Deep had become omnipresent on the New York mixtape scene, releasing all kinds of streets-only material in attempt to re-establish themselves. It evidently worked, as
Blood Money debuted in the Top Ten of Billboard's album chart and brought more exposure to
Mobb Deep than the duo had enjoyed since their late-'90s heyday. Not everyone was convinced by the group's makeover, however, as the
G-Unit approach was substantially more polished than the
Mobb Deep of
The Infamous. Still,
Mobb Deep found a new generation of younger listeners -- the large
G-Unit market base, in particular -- who were mostly unfamiliar with them. It had been over a decade since
The Infamous, after all, and
Mobb Deep had been out of the spotlight for years. Then, in early 2008,
Prodigy went away to prison to serve a three-year sentence, putting
Mobb Deep's future in question. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide